serve
webpassgen
Our great sponsors
serve | webpassgen | |
---|---|---|
9 | 11 | |
9,165 | 138 | |
0.9% | - | |
4.3 | 7.7 | |
8 days ago | 2 months ago | |
TypeScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
serve
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How to debug TypeScript in Chrome
The above code starts a static server (Vercel’s serve) in port 3000. Open the URL in Chrome, open the DevTools, and click the Source tab. You’ll see main.ts as follows:
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The future of React projects on Heroku
Another alternative that comes to my mind it is to use the node.js buildpack and serve the static files using serve or similar.
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Trouble Enabling FAST_REFRESH
If you don't know how to create a backend, you can try https://npmjs.com/package/serve which is a command that will run a simple server that just serves you the files in a folder (kinda like /public does) but it runs separately from CRA/Webpack so will not affect your app. You then have to take care of fetching and updating the data with fetch() as often as you need.
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Webpack taking ages to load page AFTER build is complete
In app.jsx I've tried removing all the root code and just rendered a typical "Hello World" p tag and it doesn't take nearly as long. I've also ran a basic web server infront of the build folder using serve which suggests it might webpack-dev-server that is having issues with the size of the application (Or could it be saying it's built before it actually is?).
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Vercel raises $150M Series D at $2.5B valuation
Maybe I was lacking context a bit. I was referencing this actually: https://github.com/vercel/serve/pull/680
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is there a way to turn a godot project into a website?
https://github.com/vercel/serve (nodejs implementation, therefore requires npm or yarn being installed which are package managers for node)
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Hat.sh V2 release - simple, fast, secure client-side file encryption.
React.js/ Next.js / Material-UI / Browserify (bundle packaging) / Serve (static site serving) / React-Dropzone (file drag drop) / React-Idle-Timer / zxcvbn.js (Password strength estimation)
- Already have a domain. Best place for hosting and SSL?
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Easiest way to test HTML5 exports on Windows 10?
https://github.com/vercel/serve (that one should run on every system since it's implemented in NodeJS)
webpassgen
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Do you actually put in ALL your passwords ?
Individuals like OP, who are contemplating a switch to Bitwarden (and therefore probably do not have access to any Bitwarden clients yet) can use Bitwarden's Online Password Generator (after setting the Type option to "Passphrase"), or use other online passphrase generators (although you should probably do a little bit of due-diligence research on the generator tool that you choose before trusting it to generate the master password for your Bitwarden vault).
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Password Maker Compromised
For your Bitwarden master password, you can use this password generator, which has 22 different English word lists (and many non-English options as well) for generating passphrases at a specified minimum entropy level. For example, select the option "Colors" in the "Alternate" box, and you will get a passphrase that looks something like this:
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Balancing master password length for security and usability
Yes, Bitwarden has an online passphrase generator (change the "Type" to "Passphrase"), but since you are responding to a comment by /u/atoponce, I would be remiss not to recommend Aaron's own passphrase generator tool (https://ae7.st/g/), as well as his project to audit online password/passphrase geenrators.
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SysAdmins' favorite password generator is finally back!
The only pw gen I trust (download it and run it locally): https://github.com/atoponce/webpassgen
- New webpassgen release: 20220802
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What password generators does everyone use now since passwordgenerator plus is gone?
Thanks! Note, the source code is at https://github.com/atoponce/webpassgen. I'd rather you opened it locally in your browser rather than trusting my web server. Also, it's probably high time for a new release.
- 👂Tell us your thoughts about the Password Strength Testing Tool
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Passphrase language
I have also seen ones online like this .
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Hat.sh V2 release - simple, fast, secure client-side file encryption.
I don't necessarily agree. I wrote a web-based password generator (and a command line version) that doesn't rely on any 3rd party libraries, like JQuery, Bootstrap, Vue.js, Angular, etc. with the primary focus being a clean UI and pleasant UX. I like to think I achieved those goals.
- Til Diceware Ships An 8192 Word List
What are some alternatives?
zxcvbn - Low-Budget Password Strength Estimation
scrypt - The scrypt key derivation function was originally developed for use in the Tarsnap online backup system and is designed to be far more secure against hardware brute-force attacks than alternative functions such as PBKDF2 or bcrypt.
RandomValuesNPP - Generate random values plug-in for Notepad++. Use this plugin to generate passwords, guids or random datasets in CSV, JSON, XML and SQL formats. Use the fake test data for performance and QA testing to improve software quality in application development, reports, database modeling, webdev etc.
react-idle-timer - User activity timer component
diceware - Generate secure passwords you can actually remember!
serve - A very simple HTTP server to serve static files in a directory. Run 'serve' to start serving files!
diceware - A tool for generating strong Diceware passwords, with entropy and crack time estimates.
Godot - Godot Engine – Multi-platform 2D and 3D game engine
age - A simple, modern and secure encryption tool (and Go library) with small explicit keys, no config options, and UNIX-style composability.
browserify - browser-side require() the node.js way
xkcdpass - Generate secure multiword passwords/passphrases, inspired by XKCD